Go to main navigation Navigation menu Skip navigation Home page Search

Seminar in Economics | with Evan Rose

Department of Economics welcomes you to a seminar with Evan Rose, University of Chicago.

Welcome to this Higher Seminar in Economics organized by the Department of Economics, SSE. The seminar speaker is Evan Rose, an Assistant Professor in the Kenneth C. Griffin Department of Economics at the University of Chicago who will present "How Replaceable is a Low-Wage Job?"

Abstract

This paper studies the long-run consequences of losing a low-wage job using linked employer-employee wage records and household surveys. For full-time workers earning $15 per hour or less, job loss due to an idiosyncratic, firm-wide contraction generates a 13% reduction in earnings 4-6 years later and more than $40,000 cumulative lost earnings. Most of this long-run decrease stems from reductions in employment and hours as opposed to wage rates: job losers are twice as likely to report being unemployed and looking for work, and annual weeks worked are reduced by 10%. By contrast, workers initially earning more than $15 per hour see comparable long-run earnings losses driven primarily by reductions in hourly wages. We interpret these effects through a dynamic job-ladder model, which implies that the flow rents from holding a full-time $15 per hour job relative to unemployment are 3.1% of earnings.

 

The seminar takes place at Stockholm School of Economics, Sveavägen 65, room 320.

Please contact fanni.antal@hhs.se if you have any questions.

Dept. of Economics Economics Seminar in economics